Russia’s UN envoy dies ‘unexpectedly’

This file photo taken on March 7, 2014 shows Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s Ambassador to the United Nations speaking to the media after a closed-door session of the Security Council to discuss the situation in Ukraine at UN headquarters in New York. Russia’s envoy to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin died suddenly on February 20, 2017, the foreign ministry said, without naming the cause.<br />STAN HONDA / AFP

Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations, Vitaly Churkin, who for years fended off Western criticism and skillfully defended Moscow’s actions in Ukraine and Syria, died Monday in New York. He was 64.

Churkin collapsed while at work at the Russian mission to the United Nations Monday morning and was rushed to a Manhattan hospital, apparently suffering from heart problems, diplomatic sources said.

In a statement, the foreign ministry in Moscow described him as an “outstanding diplomat.” There was no information on the cause of death.

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova paid tribute to Churkin, writing on Facebook: “A great diplomat. An extraordinary personality. An outstanding individual. We have lost someone very dear.”

News of his death was met with shock at UN headquarters where Churkin, who would have turned 65 on Tuesday, had been a towering presence for a decade.

Diplomats at a routine meeting on General Assembly affairs observed a moment of silence.

Russian Deputy UN Ambassador Petr Iliichev said Churkin was at work “until his last moments.”

“His whole life was dedicated to defending the interests of Russia,” Iliichev, visibly shaken, said at the meeting. “He was on the frontline.”

“We’ve lost a prominent diplomat, a strong negotiator, a wonderful individual, a teacher, and he will always remain in our memory,” said Iliichev.

UN spokesman Farhan Haq, who heard the news during the regular midday briefing, offered his condolences, adding: “We mourn Ambassador Churkin. He has been such a regular presence here that I’m actually quite stunned.”

– Western rift with Russia –

A career diplomat born in Moscow who studied English from a young age, Churkin had been UN ambassador since April 2006, after serving as Russian ambassador to Canada and to Belgium.

During that decade, relations between Russia and the West grew increasingly tense, culminating with a major rift over Moscow’s support for separatists in east Ukraine and its military intervention in Syria.

In the final months, Churkin had clashed repeatedly with then-US ambassador Samantha Power over the bloodshed in Aleppo, staunchly defending Moscow’s view that the Syrian government was waging all-out war against “terrorists.”

During Churkin’s tenure, Russia resorted to its veto six times to block action on Syria.

Power tweeted that she was “devastated” and described Churkin as a “diplomatic maestro” and “deeply caring man” who did all he could to bridge US-Russian differences.

Power’s successor, Nikki Haley, who arrived less than a month ago, said in a statement that Churkin had “showed himself to be a gracious colleague”.

“We did not always see things the same way, but he unquestionably advocated his country’s positions with great skill,” said Haley.

French Ambassador Francois Delattre said Churkin was “one of the most talented diplomats” he’d ever met and “an exceptional representative of Russia” at the UN.

Churkin had served as foreign ministry spokesman in the early 1990s and also as special envoy to the former Yugoslavia.

Growing up in Moscow, he dabbled in acting in his early teens, notably in two films about Soviet founding father Vladimir Lenin.

He graduated from the prestigious Moscow Institute of International Relations and started at the foreign ministry first as a translator before working at the Soviet embassy in Washington in the 1980s.

Given his long posting at the UN — previously held for a decade by Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov — Churkin joked in a recent interview that his stint was surpassed only by the envoy from Turkmenistan.

He is survived by his wife Irina, son Maxim and daughter Anastasiya, who works for the state-owned RT channel.

To enable commenting and other interactive features, please switch to the more advanced .

olayiwola

CAN HE BE THE RUSSIAN CONTROLLER FOR TRUMP?

John Tosh

No one should need to be in New York for a UN Meeting, There are now ways one can communicate electronically without being there. This will prevent all the Visa issues (Iran), and attempts to murder diplomats.

The UN has to move to electronic meetings. People meet now from China to India via electronic communication which is a face to face vote. This way the childish tantrums of the Western powers would no longer be useful.

Going to the UN is now dangerous, the other alternative is to move the UN to a neural island where everyone can go there.